- Transportation costs surge, while shelter prices increase steadily.
- Goods price pressure weakens further.
- Energy prices move higher but food prices hold steady.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| May 15 2024
U.S. Home Builder Index Declines Sharply in May
- Current & future readings fall meaningfully.
- Prospective home buyer traffic is depressed.
- Regional declines are broad-based.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- +0.02% (+3.0% y/y) in Apr.; downward revisions for Mar. and Feb.
- Ex-auto sales up for the fourth month in five.
- Auto sales down for the third month in four.
- Gasoline sales post the largest of three straight m/m increases.
- Nonstore retail sales fall for the third time in four months.
- Mortgage applications edged up in the latest week.
- Purchase applications fell while refinancing applications rose.
- The effective interest rate on 30-year fixed-rate loans eased.
- Core goods prices rise moderately.
- Services prices surge after a slight decline.
- Energy prices jump, but food prices decline.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| May 14 2024
U.S. NFIB Small Business Optimism Index Edges Up in April While Inflation Remains the Number One Problem
- Apr. NFIB Small Business Optimism Index inches up 1.2 pts. to 89.7, the first m/m gain since December.
- Expected real sales increase to -12% after falling to -18%, still indicating pessimism.
- Business conditions in the next six months decline to -37%, down for the third month in four.
- Inflation (22%) is top business problem, followed by Quality of Labor (19%).
- USA| May 14 2024
U.S. Gasoline & Crude Oil Prices Decline in Latest Week
- Gasoline prices fall for third straight week.
- Crude oil costs decline sharply.
- Natural gas prices strengthen.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
Global| May 14 2024ZEW Survey Shows Improvements in German Expectations and Conditions
The economic situation, surveyed by the ZEW's survey, showed improvement in the euro area to -38.6 in May from -48.8 in April. The German survey improved to -72.3 in May from -79.2 in April. However, the economic situation in the United States lost some of its luster, with its index falling to 40.9 in May from 48.5 in April.
The survey for expectations in Germany improved to 47.1 in May from 42.9 in April. For the U.S., macroeconomic expectations remained negative at -13 in May, weaker than the -0.7 reading in April.
Inflation expectations and showing moved away from the view is an inflation was continuing to fall as the euro area continued to post a negative value of -45.6 in May, but that was stronger than the -49.1 in April. Germany's reading rose to -41.0 in May from -47.8 in April. The reading for the U.S. was much less changed, at -41 in May compared to -42.6 in April.
On the back of those expectations, short-term interest rates in the euro area were less intensely forecasted to fall as the headline reading of -80.5 in May rose from -84.6 in April. In the U.S., the reading rose to -55.2 in May from -63.7 in April.
Long-term interest rate expectations continue to drop, however. In Germany, expectations for long-term rates fell to -33.5 in May from -26.9 in April. In the U.S., the reading edged lower to -28.3 in May from -26.5 in April. The outlook for lower long-term interest rates is still intact.
Stock market performance in May is stronger in the U.S., euro area, and Germany. This is despite some minor degradation in the assessment for current conditions and expectations in the U.S. Euro area stock market expectations showed its diffusion value of 23.3 in May, up from 7.2 in April. The German reading rose to 18.7 in May from 3.8 in April. The U.S. index in May rose to 21.5 from 9.9 in April. All-in-all, the ZEW survey participants are becoming much more constructive on the stock market as they become modestly and more constructive on the bond market.
Despite these various shifts in the survey, the percentile standings of most of these indicators remain extremely weak: for example, economic situation assessments stand in the 41st percentile for the euro area, the 17th percentile for Germany but manage to rise above the neutral mark of 50 to the 58.1 percentile in the U.S. Economic expectations in Germany have crept up to a 68.8 percentile reading compared to only a 32.3 percentile reading in the U.S. Inflation expectations everywhere remain low with the euro area and the U.S. having percentile standings below their 10th percentile, while in Germany they post a still-low value in its 14th percentile- all those are very low readings. Short-term interest rate expectations in the euro area have been lower only 4.1% of the time; in the U.S. they've been lower only 9.3% of the time. Long-term rate expectations have been lower in Germany only 2.2% of the time and in the U.S. only 1.9% of the time on the ZEW survey metric. Participants continue to look for extremely low long-term interest rates. The stock market expectations, while up sharply in the month, have only reached the 24th percentile for Germany, the 12th percentile for the euro area and the 38th percentile for the U.S. On balance, stock market expectations haven’t reached their median values in any of these areas and although they've improved the outlook for their performance is still muted.
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